The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The greatest killer in New Orleans was the heat

Friends of those who died in this manner ask if more could have been done.

- NEW ORLEANS Nicholas Bogel-burroughs and Katy Reckdahl |

In many ways, Iley Joseph’s one-bedroom apartment was an ideal place to ride out a hurricane. It was on the third floor — much too high to flood — of a building that was sturdy and new, part of a sleek, gated community for older residents like him.

But in the days after Hurricane Ida, his home began to feel like a trap. The power failure that cut off electricit­y to New Orleans rendered Joseph’s air-conditione­r useless and his refrigerat­or nothing more than a cupboard.

Even worse, the outage froze the complex’s elevators in place, sealing him inside the building because his health problems prevented him from using the stairs.

Joseph, 73, insisted in telephone conversati­ons with his sons that he was doing just fine. But in his apartment, No. 312, it kept getting hotter. On Sept. 2, the fourth day after the storm hit — the hottest yet — a friend found him lying still on the side of his bed.

“I call his name, he doesn’t respond,” said the friend, Jared Righteous. “I realized he was gone.”

Only in recent days, as the last lights flickered back on in New Orleans, have officials here discovered the true toll of Hurricane Ida. Unlike in the Northeast, where many who perished were taken by floodwater­s and tornadoes, heat has emerged as the greatest killer in New Orleans.

Of 14 deaths caused by the storm in the city, Joseph’s and nine others are believed to be tied to the heat. Experts say there are probably more. And friends of those who died have begun to ask whether the government or apartment landlords could have done more to protect older residents before they died, often alone, in stiflingly hot homes.

“Heat is a hazard that we simply haven’t given sufficient attention to,” said David Hondula, a professor at Arizona State University who studies the effects of sweltering temperatur­es. “All cities are in the early stages of understand­ing what an effective heat response looks like.”

Response to heat as hazard lacking

In New Orleans, officials set up air-conditione­d cooling centers across the city and distribute­d food, water and ice around town. But for residents like Joseph who could not leave their buildings, the aid might as well have been worlds away.

All 10 people whose deaths have been tied to the heat were in their 60s and 70s, and they died over four broiling days, the last of which was Sept. 5, a full week after the storm.

Among the first was Corinne Labat-hingle, a 70-year-old woman who had fled to Memphis during Hurricane

Katrina but returned to New Orleans and was living at an apartment complex for older people near Saint Bernard Avenue, a short walk from the city’s largest park. She was found dead Sept. 2, when the temperatur­e reached 93 degrees outdoors and was most likely higher inside her apartment.

Two days later, another 93-degree day, four people were found dead, including Reginald Logan, 74, whose body was discovered after a neighbor saw flies in his window. On Sept. 5, the heat index reached 101, and one of the last victims of the heat was found dead: Keith Law, a 65-year-old man who lived in

the Algiers neighborho­od.

Heat most likely contribute­s to more deaths each year than are officially recorded, Hondula said. Although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports fewer than 700 heat-related deaths a year, some studies have estimated 5,000 to 12,000. Last month, The New York Times found that 600 more people died in Oregon and Washington in the last week of June, during a heat wave, than normally would have, a number three times the state officials’ estimates of heat-related deaths.

This comes as heat waves are growing more frequent, longer lasting and more dangerous. The 2018 National Climate Assessment, a major scientific report by 13 federal agencies, notes that the number of hot days is increasing, and the frequency of heat waves in the United States jumped from an average of two per year in the 1960s to six per year by the 2010s.

People who die from the heat may not recognize their symptoms as life-threatenin­g, and heat-related deaths can also occur suddenly, with little warning. The most frequent cause is cardiovasc­ular failure, when the heart cannot pump blood fast enough. Less frequent are deaths from heat stroke, when a person’s internal

temperatur­e rises by several degrees and the body cannot cool off, causing organs like the brain, heart or kidneys to fail.

Danger to seniors need to be recognized

Laura Bergerol, a 65-yearold New Orleans photograph­er, died Sept. 5. She had planned to evacuate to Florida before the storm but told friends she had trouble finding a hotel room. By the time she arranged plans, it was too dangerous to leave. After the storm, an errant $400 charge on her bank account had left her without enough money to get out. She stocked up on candles and hunkered down in her second-floor apartment in an affordable complex built for artists in the Bywater neighborho­od downriver from the French Quarter.

“Missed my window of opportunit­y,” she wrote on Twitter. “Curse you #Hurricanei­da.”

Neighbors said Bergerol largely stayed in her apartment with the doors and windows closed. Still, she seemed to be surviving. On Sept. 3, she texted Josh Hailey, a neighbor, asking if she could visit his cat while he was out. “I have plenty of treats,” she wrote. The next day, she joined neighbors in the building’s courtyard for a showing of “Cinderella.”

On Sunday, Hailey let himself into her apartment when she did not answer the door. He found her lying on the floor and tried to resuscitat­e her, but it was too late. That evening, the neighbors played brass-band music in the courtyard and danced for Bergerol, recalling her vivid blue eyes and frequent, wide smile.

By then, city health officials had begun to realize the danger that older residents were facing. A day before Bergerol’s death, they evacuated eight apartments for older residents, including several where people had died. Now, city officials are considerin­g mandating, during natural disasters, that subsidized apartments serving older or disabled residents have generators, conduct welfare checks or have a building manager on the property at all times, a spokespers­on said.

 ?? JOHNNY MILANO/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? National Guard members distribute ice outside a community center on Sept. 1 in New Orleans. The city was without power for days after Hurricane Ida made landfall.
JOHNNY MILANO/THE NEW YORK TIMES National Guard members distribute ice outside a community center on Sept. 1 in New Orleans. The city was without power for days after Hurricane Ida made landfall.
 ?? ILEY JOSEPH JR. VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? An undated family photo shows Iley Joseph (left) with his older son, Iley Joseph Jr., and grandson. Of 14 deaths caused by Ida in New Orleans, Joseph’s and nine others are believed to be tied to the heat.
ILEY JOSEPH JR. VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES An undated family photo shows Iley Joseph (left) with his older son, Iley Joseph Jr., and grandson. Of 14 deaths caused by Ida in New Orleans, Joseph’s and nine others are believed to be tied to the heat.
 ?? EDMUND D. FOUNTAIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Volunteers distribute food and water Aug. 31 in New Orleans during the power outage that followed Hurricane Ida. The city set up air-conditione­d cooling centers and distribute­d food, water and ice around town.
EDMUND D. FOUNTAIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Volunteers distribute food and water Aug. 31 in New Orleans during the power outage that followed Hurricane Ida. The city set up air-conditione­d cooling centers and distribute­d food, water and ice around town.

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